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Monday, 2 June 2014

I have to start this review by stating that this was
probably the most difficult novel I have ever read. When you are not a genius,
how do you review something composed by a genius? Your insignificant thoughts
are mere ramblings compared to the broad sweeping vista of Krasznahorkai’s
mind.

Let’s start off by explaining that the chapters are
numbered in the Fibonacci sequence (missing 0 and 1) – if you don’t know what
the Fibonacci sequence is I suggest you google it and then become even more
confused. You’ll find heaps of references to nature, art, Elloitt waves, golden
means, you get me? Let’s simply say the chapters are 1,2,3,5,8,13,21,34,55,89,144,233,377,610,987,1597
and 2854

These seventeen sections could be easily read as
seventeen short stories, as we do not have a common narrator, or character and
the sections cover just about the breadth of human existence. The inner sleeve
tells me “Seiobo – a Japanese goddess – has a peach tree in her garden that
blossoms once every three thousand years; its fruit brings immortality. In
“Seiobo There Below”, we see her returning to mortal realms, searching for a
glimpse of perfection.“ Now I must have been asleep when I read that section,
as my only recollection of Seiobo’s involvement was through a Noh dancer
performing as her.

As we know Karsznahorkai creates long winding passages
of text, and this work is no different, with single sentences taking up whole
chapters and running for thirty–forty pages. Therefore I may well have missed
the fact that Seiobo returned to mortal realms, it could well have been
squeezed in the middle of a forty page sentence, wall to wall text, no
breathing between ramblings, no breaks for the astute reader, just text, text,
text and more of the same text, passages that return to their origins and then
split off again, for further ramblings.... get what I mean?

What I’m telling you may well lead you away from this
amazing work, yes it is difficult, but it is also probably one of the most
rewarding and enlightening books I have ever read. An amazing landscape of
humanity attempting to define beauty, our eternal search for ultimate bliss,
each and every chapter is a further exploration of the nature of perfection,
whether through architecture, painting, music, sculpture or an amazing written
contribution to perfection? Our welcome is not that open though...

It
would be better for you to turn around and go into the thick grasses, there
where one of those strange grassy islets in the riverbed will completely cover
you, it would be better if you do this for once and for all, because if you
come back tomorrow, or after tomorrow, there will be no one at all to understand,
no one to look, not even a single one among all your natural enemies that will
be able to see who you really are; it would be better for you to go away this
very evening when twilight begins to fall, it would be better for you to
retreat with the others, if night begins to descend, and you should not come
back if tomorrow, or after tomorrow, dawn breaks, because for you it will be
much better for there to be no tomorrow and no day after tomorrow; so hide away
in the grass, sink down, fall onto your side, let your eyes slowly close, and
die, for there is no point in the sublimity that you bear, die at midnight in
the grass, sink down and fall, and let it be like that – breathe your last.

Here is a quick summation of the blend which makes up
“Seiobo There Below”. We have a heron in a Japanese river who remains perfectly
still, an Italian bible crossword telling us that if we solve 54 across we’ll
reach a decisive conclusion (“Queen Vashti has done wrong, not only against all
the nobles and the peoples of all the provinces of King Xerxes” Esther 1:16),
we have references to an Australian skin care website (which if you investigate
actually takes you to Arabic articles on liposuction), we have a Persian Queen,
Filippo Lippi-Firenze from 1470 an apprentice to Botticelli, Queen Vashti then
appears on a wedding chest painted by Lippi (or was it Botticelli).

We have the restoration of a Buddha statue from 1367,
recognised for its immortal “one single gaze”, we have a painting of the dead
Christ being restored, Christ appears to be wanting to open his eyes. We have a
Hungarian tourist visiting the Acropolis totally unprepared, another tourist in
Venice who returns to visit a painting of Dead Christ, then an artist who
creates “shiro-hannya”, the demon-head mask created for a Japanese Noh play.
Flick over to a destitute Romanian who has been tricked into travelling to
Spain for work and he stumbles across a mystical gallery where “these angels
were real”.

Seiobo is introduced as part of Inoue Kazuyuki’s
section, a celebrated Noh dancer who has found the meaning of life:

And
he understood everything, and since then he has known that there is no
tomorrow; I never think about that – he lowers his voice even more, and with
every word that he utters he smiles, as is his custom, then his face closes up
again – never, he says, because I only think about today, for me there is no
tomorrow, for me there is no future, because every day is the last day, and
every day is full and complete, and I could die on any given day, I am ready
for it, and then the whole thing will come to an end, and by this he means that
– he looks up at a guest sitting across from him on the other side of the room
– that one whole will come to an end, and in the distance another shall begin,
I am waiting for death, he says with an unvarying smile, I am waiting he says,
and death is always close to me, and I shall lose nothing if I die, because for
me only the present means everything, this day, this hour, this moment - this
moment in which I am dying.

Our novel then moves to Pietro di Vannucci (Il
Perugino) and his apprentices, we learn of his struggle to paint anymore. We
have the Alhambra in Spain, our journey explains that we don’t know its real
name, who built it, when it was built, its main function, but we do know its
beauty. Another chapter and another artist who creates sculptures out of earth,
by digging in hidden places away from prying eyes. Our protagonist then becomes
the guard of the Venus de Milo, there was the Venus de Milo and beyond that
there was nothing else at all.

We then have a lecturer giving his thoughts on the
analysis of music’s essence, it shatters people’s hearts – this lecture is to a
handful of elderly people, given by an ageing architect who has never had a
building constructed. Then we have landscape artist Oswald Kienzl standing in
line to buy a train ticket, frustrated at the lack of pace in the queue as he
recalls his mourning. Back to Japan and a Shinto tree sacrifice ceremony that
takes place every twenty years as part the rebuilding of the Ise Shrine, we’re
here for edition seventy-one, this section highlighting the clash of European
and Japanese cultures.

Onto Se’ami who has been exiled to the island of
Sadogashima, he is creating a mask, o-beshimi rain-making mask for use in
bagaku. Then we hear of tomb desecrations (known as “excavations”) of the earth
below the Shang dynasty in 1600-1100BC.

What a deep exploration of humanity, covering
thousands upon thousands of years of human history, the art and the beauty,
ceremonies and beliefs contained in each era. As we know these characters are
all real and as I read through each section I was enticed to research these
characters further, view the artworks on line, understand the struggles through
further reading. This is a huge puzzle of a novel, seeking the ultimate
answers:

he
looks at me, moved, he looks at my dance, but he sees me as well, as I relate
to him with earthly movements that there is a Heaven, that high above the
clouds there is a Light that then scatters into a thousand colors, that there
is, if he casts his gaze up high and becomes deeply immersed in his soul, a
boundless space in which there is nothing, but nothing at all, not even a tiny
little movement like this one here, which now must slowly come to an end:

All of the puzzles are intertwined, the immortal
beauty of Vashti is aligned with the immortal gaze of Buddha, which replicates
a crucified Christ wanting to open his eyes......

a
dark obscurity lay in these eyes, and it seemed unbearable that this dark
obscurity was emanating such an endless sadness, and not the sadness of one who
suffers but of one who has suffered – but not even that; he got up, and then he
leaned back in the chair; it is not a question here of suffering but only of
sorrow, a sorrow impossible to grasp in its entirety, and entirely
incomprehensible to him, an immeasurable sorrow, he looked into Christ’s eyes
and he saw nothing else there, just this pure sorrow, as if it were a sorrow
without cause, he froze at the thought of it, SORROW, JUST LIKE THAT, FOR
EVERYTHING, for creation, for existence, for beings, for time, for suffering
and for passion, for birth and destruction

I could write endless passages here about the meaning
of existence and how Krasznahorkai has moved beyond the simple apocalyptic
message and into the world of beauty, the essence of non-existence and the
importance of the present moment. An amazing work, which requires savouring, a
slow read, allow yourself to be immersed in the world of nothing:

the
earth with the water, the water with the sky, and into the earth and the water
and the sky, into this indescribable Cosmos is woven our fragile existence as
well, but merely for just one moment that cannot be traced, then, already, it
is no more, it disappears for all eternity, irrevocably...nothing else remains,
only and exclusively the landscape;